Innovative Transportation Finance


Book Description

Transportation finance has been historically dominated by assessing taxes to transportation users and taxes on the general public. Innovative financing mechanisms such as tax increment financing, special assessment districts, and others represent value capture techniques that tax property owners to pay for transportation costs. Value capture techniques provide supplemental funds to support capital construction costs but are not substitutes for existing dedicated and traditional tax revenue methods. The major findings of Texas practice indicate that tax increment financing for transit does not significantly contribute towards the transit infrastructure. Instead tax increment funds finance the improvement of public infrastructure surrounding transit stations and stops and can be labeled transit-supportive investments.




Value Capture Implementation Manual


Book Description

This document provides information for State departments of transportation and local public agencies to consider implementing value capture. It covers value capture techniques and features, including developer contributions, transportation utility fees, special taxes and fees, tax increment financing, joint development, and naming rights. It includes options for making the business case for value capture, as well as overviews of the regulatory framework involved and risk management. Several case studies and examples are provided.




Transit Value Capture Coordination


Book Description

"As Federal and State capital support for fixed guideway projects has become more uncertain, project sponsors have been forced to look for alternate sources of funds. One of those sources is a group of tactics commonly referred to as value capture. There are several tactics by which project sponsors can capture value created by transportation facility expansion and/or renewal. Many projects, both domestic and foreign, have attempted to use value capture tactics to help fund transportation improvements. This project seeks to answer one question: How can a transit system better blend its investment in its fixed guideway system with community development plans adjacent thereto and value capture strategies to help induce the best development outcomes and thereby maximize the value capture return to the transit authority to help finance the infrastructure investment? In order to answer this question this project will examine three different aspects of value capture as it pertains to rail facilities. First, the actual methods of value capture will be delineated via an in-depth literature review. Said methods will be defined and assigned categories for the purpose of aiding in the second phase of the study: case studies of domestic and international projects utilizing value capture tactics to fund transportation improvements. Finally, our project team will endeavor to identify the necessary steps and conditions required to implement a value capture strategy with emphasis being placed on the importance of intergovernmental cooperation and steps to eliminate the current disconnect between community development planners/the community at large and developers necessary for value capture arrangements to achieve success."--




Financing Transit-Oriented Development with Land Values


Book Description

This book provides cities with strategies and methodologies for applying land value capture financing schemes for capital-intensive transit and transit-related investments, based on the successful experiences of Mass Transit Railway Corporation in Hong Kong SAR, China, and Japanese railway companies in Tokyo metropolitan areas.




Value Capture and Land Policies


Book Description

"Attention to value capture as a source of public revenue has been increasing in the United States and internationally as some governments experience declines in revenue from traditional sources and others face rapid urban population growth and require large investments in public infrastructure. Privately funded improvements by land-owners can increase the value of their land and property. Public actions, such as investments in infrastructure, the provision of public services, and planning and land use regulation, can also affect the value of land and property. Value capture is a means to realize as public revenue some portion of that increase in value through various revenue-raising instruments. This book, based on the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy's sixth annual land policy conference in May 2011, examines the concept of value capture, its forms, and applications. The first section, on the conceptual framework and history of value capture, reviews its relationship to compensation for partial takings; the long history of value capture policies in Britain and France; and the remarkable expansion of tax increment financing in California. The second section reviews the application of particular instruments of value capture, including the conversion of rural to urban land in China, town planning schemes in India, and community benefit agreements. The third section focuses on ends instead of means and examines the use of value capture by community land trusts to provide affordable housing, the use of land development to finance transit, and the use of various fees to fund airports. The final section explores potential extensions of value capture mechanisms to tax-exempt nonprofits and to the management of state trust lands in the United States."--Publisher's website.